Amazon Adventure Film at AMNH

Filmed on location, Amazon Adventure plunges audiences into a wild world of breathtaking beauty and captivating animal behavior including an array of nature’s masters of mimicry.

Now you can join the Amazon Adventure when The American Museum of Natural History in New York debuts this new IMAX documentary starting March 9th through mid-September.

Amazon Adventure Screening from March 9 through September 13, 2018, will be shown daily in the Museum’s Samuel J. and Ethel LeFrak Theater, in 2D at 11:30 am and 4:30 pm, and in 3D at 10:30 am and 12:30, 1:30, 2:30, and 3:30 pm. Times are subject to change.

SYNOPSIS

Amazon Adventure traces the extraordinary journey of 19th-century naturalist and explorer Henry Walter Bates—the most influential scientist you’ve never heard of—who provided “the beautiful proof” to Charles Darwin for his revolutionary theory of evolution by natural selection, the scientific explanation for the development of life on Earth.

As a young man, Bates risked his life for science during his 11-year expedition into the Amazon rain forest. The film is a compelling detective story of peril, perseverance, and, ultimately, success, drawing audiences into his fascinating study of animal mimicry, the phenomenon in which one animal adopts the look of another.

Painstakingly researched for three years, the film enlisted the expertise of more than 100 scientists and historical advisers. The team’s commitment to authenticity resulted in this rigorous re-creation, even using actual instruments and tools from the 1850s. The writing team also incorporated many of Bates’ own words, as he was a gifted storyteller.

Amazon Adventure Official Trailer

Produced by SK Films (Flight of the Butterflies 3D), the film is directed by Mike Slee and is executive produced by Jonathan Barker and Sean B. Carroll, starring Calum Finlay as Henry Bates, written by Wendy MacKeigan and Carl Knutson and shot by cinematographers Gerry Vasbenter and Richard Kirby, with an original score by Brazilian composer Antonio Pinto.

The makers of the film, a co-production between Canada, the U.K., and Brazil, were granted unprecedented access by the Natural History Museum of London to film Bates’ own scientific field notebooks and botanical drawings, and to film the butterflies he personally collected over 160 years ago—butterflies that had never left the museum.

Developed in close collaboration with HHMI Tangled Bank Studios, Amazon Adventure also received major funding from the National Science Foundation through the film’s educational outreach partner, Pacific Science Center. Other key partners include the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, the Simons Foundation, and Foxconn Brazil and Vale.

My friend who lives in CT & I keep talking about meeting up in the city to spend some time together! This would be the perfect reason to get together, and give us something fun to do that we'd both be interested in!